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Categories => Entertainment & Celebrities => Topic started by: Ritu on Apr 15, 2026, 06:05 PM

Title: Why late-2000s movies look better colour-graded than today
Post by: Ritu on Apr 15, 2026, 06:05 PM
Title: Re: Why late-2000s movies look better colour-graded than today
Post by: Damini on Apr 15, 2026, 06:05 PM
I really miss those colourful movies, yaar.
Title: Re: Why late-2000s movies look better colour-graded than today
Post by: Harini on Apr 15, 2026, 06:05 PM
https://youtu.be/tvwPKBXEOKE
Title: Re: Why late-2000s movies look better colour-graded than today
Post by: Gauri on Apr 15, 2026, 06:05 PM
You can't really compare a Jeeva masterpiece in cinematography and DI colour grading with the newer ones. That was shot on film. Except for Nolan, everyone's using digital now. It all comes down to lighting, lenses and the cinematographer.
Title: Re: Why late-2000s movies look better colour-graded than today
Post by: Chirag on Apr 15, 2026, 06:05 PM
Jeeva and K.V. Anand were in a different league of cinematography back then. All their movies still look fresh.
Title: Re: Why late-2000s movies look better colour-graded than today
Post by: Amit on Apr 15, 2026, 06:05 PM
The world's slowly losing its colour... everything's just black or white now because they think that's 'aesthetic'.
Title: Re: Why late-2000s movies look better colour-graded than today
Post by: Suraj on Apr 15, 2026, 06:05 PM
It's all thanks to the cinematography by Jeeva ✨.
Title: Re: Why late-2000s movies look better colour-graded than today
Post by: Falguni on Apr 15, 2026, 06:05 PM
Shot on film back then vs digital today.
Title: Re: Why late-2000s movies look better colour-graded than today
Post by: Lavanya on Apr 15, 2026, 06:05 PM
The same thing's happening in gaming - art direction is fading. PS3 and PS4 era games had way better cinematography in their cut-scenes. Nowadays games just have those stiff UE5-style cut-scenes.
Title: Re: Why late-2000s movies look better colour-graded than today
Post by: Rupali on Apr 15, 2026, 06:05 PM
This is true for American productions too. Folks have written a lot about it, but TL;DR: (1) most films are streamed online now, so flattening the colour makes it look consistent across devices; (2) viewers link vivid colours with older movies, so bright grading feels dated; (3) a lot is done in post, so many parts of production are less thoughtful - the attitude is 'we can fix it later'. The shift from film to digital gets blamed, yet many digital movies from the 2000s had great colour grading.
Title: Re: Why late-2000s movies look better colour-graded than today
Post by: Keerthi on Apr 15, 2026, 06:05 PM
Peak Harris Mams - the golden era.